What kind of sports does Mexico have?

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What kind of sports does Mexico have?

Sports have strongly influenced the formation and evolution of Mexican culture. A few of the more popular traditional Mexican sports include bullfighting, charrería, and fronton. Other popular sports include soccer, baseball, and boxing. Soccer is considered to be the most popular sport in Mexico, as it is frequently played all over the country. The sport also attracts the most Mexican viewers. Baseball and boxing are among the other most popular sports to watch and play in Mexico. Mexico has a professional baseball league that is split up into two leagues, the Northern and Southern League. Many of the top professional baseball players in the United States come from Mexico. Similarly, many of the world’s best boxers come from Mexico, including athletes such as Canelo Álvarez, Julio César Chávez, Carlos Zárate, and Salvador Sánchez.

Soccer, or fútbol, is the most popular sport in Mexico. It is estimated that more than eight million Mexicans play the sport, and there are more than 17,000 teams within the country. Soccer was first brought to Mexico in the late 1800s and first played at the professional level in 1943. The country has four leagues for men’s professional teams, along with two leagues for women’s soccer. Mexico has also had the privilege of hosting the World Cup on two separate occasions.

What is the most watched sporting event in Mexico?

Soccer is the most watched sport in Mexico each year. One of the highest viewed recent sporting events was the FIFA World Cup qualifying match between Canada and Mexico in 2021. This match was aired on Telemundo Deportes and attracted up to 2.4 million viewers at one point during the broadcast. Other major soccer competitions, such as when Mexico plays in a World Cup game, frequently attract millions of viewers within the country and worldwide.

What is the national sport of Mexico?

Charrería is the national sport of Mexico. The sport was first introduced in Mexico during the 16th century and became the national sport in 1933. It closely resembles and had a strong influence on the formation of the American rodeo. Charrería is considered an equestrian sport that includes several competitions and features livestock like horses and cattle. The competitors, also known as charros, show off their skills with a lasso to perform various tasks along with strength challenges, such as bull riding. 

As in most of Latin America, football (soccer) commands the passion of Mexican sports fans of all ages. From small towns to Mexico City, virtually everything comes to a halt when the Mexican national team competes in a World Cup match. Mexico hosted the World Cup finals in 1970 and 1986.

During the colonial period and the 19th century, bullfighting was the Mexican sport of choice. Whether the matadors were Spaniards or Mexican-born, huge crowds gathered to cheer their efforts in the bullring. Bullfighting remains an integral part of Mexican culture, and it was not until the introduction of baseball in the late 19th century that many Mexican fans transferred some of their loyalty away from bullfighting. Several Mexican players have distinguished themselves in the U.S. major leagues, most notably pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, winner of the Cy Young Award in 1981.

Mexican boxers and long-distance runners have also had great success in international competition, including lightweight boxing champion Julio César Chávez. In 1968 Mexico became the first developing country to host an Olympiad; Mexico City was the site of the Summer Games—though the event was notorious for its cost overruns and the public demonstrations and violence immediately preceding it, including the shooting of hundreds of demonstrators by the military.

Desierto de los Leones National Park, Mexico

Mexico maintains a system of national and state parks, reserves, and other protected lands. The country’s first protected area was created by presidential decree in 1876. Subsequent decrees designated Mexico’s first forest reserve in 1898 and its first national park, Desierto de los Leones (“Desert of the Lions”), near Mexico City in 1917. The backbone of the park system was created by two presidents: during the 1930s Lázaro Cárdenas established some 40 national parks and 7 reserves, and José López Portillo (1976–82) added another 9 national parks and 20 reserves. However, the government’s limited budget does not adequately fund and staff the park system. As a result, environmental pollution, illegal logging, heavy tourist traffic, and other human actions are major threats to public lands.

Among Mexico’s larger national parks are Cumbres de Monterrey (Monterrey Peaks), which was created in 1939 around picturesque canyons and slopes in the Sierra Madre Oriental; Cañón del Sumidero (Sumidero Canyon) and Valle de los Cirios (Cirios Valley), both founded in 1980; and Sian Ka’an, which was established in 1986 on a large expanse of rainforest in Quintana Roo. Cañón de Río Blanco (White River Canyon) National Park was established in 1938. Hundreds of thousands of tourists annually visit the national parks around Mexico City, including Iztaccihuatl-Popocatépetl (1935) and La Malinche (1938). The country’s principal marine parks, established in the 1990s, are the Veracruz Reef System and Scorpions Reef, the latter of which protects a group of islands and reefs north of the Yucatán Peninsula. UNESCO has honoured Mexico by designating a number of places World Heritage sites, including El Vizcaíno Biosphere Reserve, which is a major sanctuary for gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) in Baja California (added to the list in 1993); a national park at Palenque (1987); the Paquimé (Casas Grandes) and Calakmul archaeological sites (1998 and 2002, respectively); and several ecologically sensitive islands in the Gulf of California (2005).

Mexico City is one of the leading publishing centres for Spanish-language books and magazines. It also has a large number of daily newspapers, some of which are respected for their objectivity and relative independence. Although newspapers are guaranteed freedom of the press under the constitution and there is no official censorship, many have been traditionally muted in their criticism of the president and the military. There also are regional tabloids outside the capital, but they have little national impact.

Mexico is a world leader in the production of Spanish-language television programming, videos, and other electronic media. Its television shows are syndicated throughout the hemisphere, and many of its entertainers are known internationally. Among the more-popular local programs and exports are nightly telenovelas and variety shows. By the early 21st century, Mexican companies, individuals, and government agencies accounted for a large and increasingly sophisticated share of Spanish-language Internet sites.

Ernst C. Griffin

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Charreado | © Bud Ellison / Flickr

Everyone knows that Mexicans love to play sports, but do you know the sports that have been most important in the formation of Mexico? Here are seven sports that make Mexico, Mexico. Without them the country wouldn’t be the same!

Mesoamerican ballgame

The distinction for the oldest sport played in Mexico often goes to what is commonly called the mesoamerican ballgame. This game was played throughout Central America, and although there are many archeological depictions of this game, those who study it still are not totally sure what all the rules were. From what we know it is most likely that the game was a little like racquet ball or fronton where the goal is to keep the ball in play. The ball was solid rubber and HEAVY, and archeologists believe that players used their hips to keep it in the air. Other versions seemed to exist where forearms and racquets were used. Evidence has been found suggesting that this game was also used in ritual sacrifice, meaning the losers never got a rematch, just a funeral.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Ancient Ball court | © Michael (a.k.a. moik) McCull / Flickr

Bull fighting

While most of the world has outlawed bullfighting because it is seen as cruelty towards animals, Mexico is one of the eight remaining countries in the world where it is legal. Brought by the Spanish conquistadores over 500 years ago, bullfighting has become a part of the fiber of the country. Outside of Spain, Mexico has the most important bullfighting events and toreros (bull fighters) in the world. The performance takes place in three rounds, each progressively bloodier as the bull is stabbed and brought to exhaustion by the bull fighter and picador until, in the final act, the torero stabs the bull between the shoulder blades and kills it. A bloody tradition, it is nevertheless full of pomp, circumstance and, some would say, beauty.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Tlaxcala Bull Ring | © Russ Bowling / Flickr

Fronton

Also called Basque pelota, the first versions of this game were created in the Basque country of Spain in the 1800s. The sport eventually made its way to Mexico and several important fronton clubs opened in Mexico City from the 1890s to the 1920s, including Fronton Mexico, which just last year re-opened with a new season of a Jai Alai (a type of Basque pelota played with scoop-like baskets on the players’ hands). The idea of the game is similar to handball – on a rectangular court players hit a hard ball (usually with their hands) against a main wall (called a fronton, or front wall) and get points for where it bounces back on the court, while their opponents have to try to return the serve. Where once there were fronton courts all over Mexico, they are slowly becoming extinct and the game is losing popularity to other sports, like soccer.

Soccer

By far Mexico’s most popular sport to watch, to play, and to complain about is soccer. The sport was brought to Mexico by the British who founded the Orizaba Athletic Club in 1898. The club’s main sport was cricket, but they started a soccer team in 1901 the same year that the Cornish workers for the company Real del Monte formally founded the Pachuca Athletic Club. One year later the first national soccer competition was held – a collection of teams from the Orizaba club, Reforma club, and México Cricket and British club. The sport is played across the country but is particularly popular in the central and northern parts of the country with the teams from Mexico City, Guadalajara, Pachuca, and Monterrey some of the most famous.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Mexican Soccer | © Carlos Fierro / Flickr

Baseball

While soccer dominates the airwaves, baseball is quite a popular sport in Mexico, albeit not as much as in other Latin American countries like Cuba and Venezuela. Mexico has two leagues, a northern and southern league, that play a similar seasonal schedule as the United States. Many of the best U.S. player are actually from Mexico and recruitment across the border has a long tradition of uniting the two countries. Mexican baseball is slightly more popular on the border with the United States and in the country’s port cities because it was brought to those areas of the country first by U.S. soldiers stationed in Mexico. Despite its popularity, baseball is not enough of a money-maker in Mexico for lots of cash to flow in to it. Most stadiums are medium-sized and only a portion of games are broadcast on television.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Diablos Rojos | © Angeloux / Flickr

Charrería

Out of the ranch and animal-handling competitions of Colonial Mexico came the grand gala that is today the charrería. Similiar to rodeos in the U.S. but with more formality and grace, the charreado includes events like cattle roping, horse riding and horse preformances, riding bareback and other skill-based contests and competitions. A now-famous visual of the charreando is the Escaramuza, a show of female horse-riders dressed in traditional rodeo dresses and cowboy hats. With the break up of the hacienda system at the turn of the century, charros would have traditionally preformed from hacienda to hacienda from a charro association that has kept the tradition alive to this day.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Charreado | © Bud Ellison / Flickr

Boxing

Mexico is one of the most important boxing countries in the world. Mexico boxers have won 13 Olympic medals as well. Big names in boxing have graced the stages of Mexico’s incredible boxing rings, including: Julio César Chávez, Ricardo “El Finito” López, Carlos Zárate, Rubén “El Púas” Olivares, Raúl “El Ratón” Macías, Salvador Sánchez, Marco Antonio Barrera, Érik “El Terrible” Morales, Lupe Pintor, and Juan Manuel Márquez. Boxing matches are country-wide events that bring all Mexicans together, regardless of who they are rooting for.

What kind of sports does Mexico have?
Boxing | © U.S. Army / Flickr

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